But Ambassador Holbrooke told the conference that Washington would be working under the principle that Pakistan and others in the region would have to be part of the solution to Afghanistan's problems.

"What is required in my view is new ideas, better coordination within the US government, better coordination with our Nato allies and other concerned countries, and the time to get it right," he said.

The envoy, who is to embark on a tour of the region soon, also said: "It is like no other problem we have confronted, and in my view it's going to be much tougher than Iraq.

"It is going to be a long, difficult struggle."

Pressure for reinforcements

Gen James Jones, the new US national security adviser, told reporters at the conference that a planned doubling in the number of US troops in Afghanistan to about 60,000 was not in itself enough.

The Munich security conference is an annual fixture

"The troops alone will not be sufficient and we have to... engage in the broad spectrum of things," he said.

"I want to stress that it's the cohesion of the international effort that has to be better put together in order to be successful."

America has long been pushing its Nato allies to increase their troop numbers in Afghanistan and UK Defence Secretary John Hutton raised the need for "burden-sharing", without naming any particular nation.

"Combat forces, that is a most precious contribution right now to that campaign," he said.

"We kid ourselves if we imagine that other contributions are as important."

However, German Defence Minister Franz Josef Jung, whose country is a major troop contributor in Afghanistan, insisted that civil reconstruction was as important as the military effort.

He said that Berlin thought its existing troop commitment - about 3,500 with plans to raise the number to 4,500 - was adequate.

The current Nato strength in Afghanistan is approximately 55,000, including US soldiers.

Karzai appeal

Also speaking at the Munich conference, Afghan President Hamid Karzai repeated his call for elements of the Taleban to return to Afghanistan as part of a process of reconciliation before elections later this year.

This may well be part of Mr Karzai's own electioneering tactics, our correspondent says.

With his own reputation badly damaged these days, he also launched a strong defence of the Afghan government in front of an audience comprised of many of his critics in the international community, Rob Watson notes.

Although he admitted his government suffered from corruption, he laid much of the blame for the country's problems on a lack of coordination among the international organisations supposedly trying to help Afghanistan.

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